Last Saturday night, I was among the people crowding into the Landmark Theatre for a unique experience pairing classical musicians from Symphoria with music from video games: Video Games Live.

The concert featured Symphoria, Syracuse’s local orchestra, playing music from video games paired with video of the games perfectly timed to the music and a light show. Video Games Live creator Tommy Tallarico served as emcee and played electric guitar on many of the pieces, and composer Emmanuel Fratianni was conductor.

I noticed the most unusual thing about the evening as I was walking in. The average age of the audience was about 30, a far cry from the average age for a symphony’s usual crowd.

And Tallarico encouraged the difference, encouraging the audience to shout, applaud and make their feelings known throughout the performance.

“I created this show to usher in a whole new young generation to the symphony, but also to show the world how important video games have become in our culture,” he told the crowd.

The audience members took his instructions to heart, laughing as a unit when the choir of high school and college singers sang “Sega” along with the video intro to “Sonic the Hedgehog” and shouting out “Kingdom Hearts” when Tallarico gave audience members enough clues to guess what game would be featured in the next piece.

I enjoyed the introductory piece, which featured games I remember fondly — “Pong,” “Pac Man” and “Asteroids” — and not so fondly — “Centipede” and “Tetris.” And I smiled fondly as I listened to a medley of Super Mario Brothers themes sitting next to my sons, who nicknamed themselves Mario and Luigi.

Anyone who considers video game music as beneath them really should play “Metal Gear Solid” just to listen to the complex rhythms and soaring violin work. The critically acclaimed music of “Journey” transported me with its other-worldly feel. And you could easily set the “Lord of the Rings” movies to the “Skyrim” score; both soundtracks speak of epic battles, love and loss.

If any doubt remains, a USA Today article two months ago reported that music directors and composers had a 10-year job-growth rate of 178 percent, making it the third-fastest growing occupation of all those tracked by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

SoundCon LLC, which runs an international conference on game music, analyzed the numbers and found a strong correlation to the growth of the video game industry. In fact, the growth in music composer employment can be traced to the opening of the Apple App store, in 2008, and the plethora of mobile game apps that have followed.

Bits & Pieces

The latest installment of the video game franchise “Call of Duty: Ghosts” made more than $1 billion in sales in a single day, setting a record. The previous record holder, “Grand Theft Auto V,” surpassed $1 billion in sales in three days earlier this year.

I forgot to mention it last week, but here’s some good news for fans of smartphones and apps. The Federal Aviation Administration announced that it’s lifting the requirement that people turn off their devices during take-offs and landings.

A student at Unity College, in Maine, won the national Janet L. Anderson Math Prize for creating a game based on a zombie outbreak on campus. By modeling the game as a disease, it has real-life disease management applications.

A study by the Department of Homeland Security found that 79 percent of the identified smartphone malware threats were targeted at devices running Android. Most of the remaining threats — 19 percent of the total — were focused on Symbian, an older mobile operating system used in feature phones. The most popular attacks are Trojan horses, followed by rootkits.

Nintendo suspended the 3DS’s Swapnote application, which allowed users to exchange hand-drawn notes, because minors were using it to exchange offensive materials.

Moms with kids 5 years old or younger spent an average of more than 37 hours per month using apps and websites on their smartphones, according to an analysis sponsored by AOL. That’s more time than other adults, including the young, digitally savvy generation known as millennials.

Maria Welych, who was technology editor at The Post-Standard for five years, is director of marketing and public relations at the Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science & Technology. She can be reached at mwelych@gmail.com.